Dairy-Free Protein Shakes
Dairy-free protein shakes cover two distinct situations: those with lactose intolerance (who can’t digest milk sugar), and those with dairy allergies (who must avoid milk proteins entirely). The options for each are slightly different — and both are well-served by the current supplement market.
Dairy Intolerance vs. Dairy Allergy
Lactose intolerance: The inability to digest lactose (milk sugar) due to insufficient lactase enzyme. Symptoms include bloating, gas, and digestive discomfort after consuming dairy. Whey isolate (very low lactose) may be tolerated. See our lactose-free protein powder guide for whey-based options.
Dairy/milk protein allergy: An immune response to milk proteins (casein and whey). Even trace amounts can trigger reactions. All whey and casein products must be avoided entirely, including whey isolate.
For those with a milk protein allergy, plant-based protein powders are the only powder option. For lactose intolerance, whey isolate or plant protein both work.
Ready-to-Drink Dairy-Free Protein Shakes
Ready-to-drink (RTD) options have expanded significantly. Most are plant-based, though some use pea protein isolate which provides a nutritional profile comparable to dairy-based RTDs.
What to Look For in RTD Dairy-Free Shakes
- Protein per bottle: Aim for at least 20g — many RTD plant shakes contain only 10–15g
- Complete amino acid source: Pea protein or soy protein are the best RTD options
- Sugar content: Some plant RTDs add significant sugar to improve taste — check labels
- Fortification: B12 and vitamin D are worth looking for in plant-based options
RTD Options on the Market
Pea protein RTDs: Several brands now produce RTD shakes based on pea protein isolate. These typically deliver 20g protein per bottle with a nutritional profile that competes with dairy-based RTDs.
Soy-based RTDs: Soy protein provides a complete amino acid profile in RTD format. Less common than pea-based options but available in health food stores and online.
Oat-based drinks with added protein: Some oat milk brands produce higher-protein variants, though these typically deliver lower protein per serving (10–15g) than dedicated protein shakes.
Dairy-Free Protein Powder for Shakes
Making your own shakes from dairy-free protein powder is more cost-effective than RTDs and gives more control over nutrition.
Pea Protein Powder
The most practical dairy-free protein powder option:
- 21–25g protein per serving
- Hypoallergenic (no dairy, soy, gluten, nuts)
- Mixes reasonably well — slightly thicker than whey
- Mild flavour that blends well with fruit
Best mixing tip: Blend with frozen banana or oat milk rather than water. The fat content in oat milk improves texture significantly; frozen banana adds body.
Pea + Rice Blend
The most nutritionally complete dairy-free option. The combination covers the complete amino acid profile:
- 20–25g protein per serving
- Slightly grittier than pea alone in some products
- Digestive enzymes (if included) improve absorption noticeably
Hemp Protein
Lower protein per serving but the most “whole food” plant option:
- 12–15g protein per 30g serving
- Contains omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids
- High fibre
- Earthy taste — best masked with strong flavours (banana, cocoa)
Soy Protein Isolate
Complete amino acid profile, highest protein content of plant options:
- 23–27g protein per serving
- Very low fat and carbohydrates in isolate form
- Not suitable for soy allergy
Egg White Protein
Dairy-free but not plant-based — egg white protein is a complete protein option for those avoiding dairy but not eggs:
- 20–25g protein per serving
- Neutral flavour in unflavored versions
- Clean amino acid profile comparable to whey
Making Dairy-Free Protein Shakes
Liquid Choices
Replacing milk in protein shakes:
| Liquid | Protein added | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oat milk | 1–3g | 45–60/100ml | Best flavour for plant shakes |
| Almond milk | 0.5–1g | 15–25/100ml | Low calorie, thin texture |
| Soy milk | 3–4g | 35–45/100ml | Adds meaningful protein |
| Coconut milk (carton) | 0.5g | 20–30/100ml | Good flavour, very low protein |
| Water | 0g | 0 | Lowest calorie, thinnest result |
Oat milk is the most popular dairy-free base for protein shakes — its natural sweetness and thicker texture most closely replicates the role milk plays in standard shakes.
Simple Dairy-Free Shake Recipes
Chocolate banana shake:
- 1 scoop chocolate pea protein
- 1 frozen banana
- 250ml oat milk
- Handful of ice
- ~30g protein, ~350 calories
Vanilla berry smoothie:
- 1 scoop vanilla pea/rice protein
- 100g frozen mixed berries
- 250ml almond milk
- 1 tbsp chia seeds
- ~26g protein, ~280 calories
Green protein shake:
- 1 scoop unflavored pea protein
- Large handful spinach
- 1 banana
- 200ml oat milk
- 150ml water
- ~28g protein, ~290 calories
See our full protein shake recipes guide for more options.
Dairy-Free at Mainstream Brands
Most major protein brands now offer dairy-free options:
Dedicated vegan lines: Several brands have launched fully separate vegan/plant protein ranges with flavour options comparable to their whey lines.
Cross-contamination note: Some plant proteins are manufactured in facilities that also handle dairy. If you have a milk protein allergy (not just intolerance), look for products explicitly certified as free from dairy cross-contamination, not just those with dairy-free ingredients.
Nutrition Comparison
| Option | Protein/Serving | Complete Amino Acids | Dairy-Free | Allergens |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pea + rice blend | 20–25g | Yes | Yes | None major |
| Soy isolate | 23–27g | Yes | Yes | Soy |
| Hemp | 12–15g | Near-complete | Yes | None major |
| Egg white | 20–25g | Yes | Yes | Egg |
| Whey isolate | 25–30g | Yes | No | Milk |
Related Resources
- Read about vegan protein powder for full plant-based options
- Find lactose-free protein powder if only lactose is the issue
- Compare all types in our best protein powder guide
- Explore dairy-free protein powder options in more detail
- Try protein shake recipes adapted for dairy-free